Dell to buy medical cloud archiving company

I got this industry update from ComputerWorld

InSite expands Dell’s reach into the medical IT services market

Expanding its reach into the medical IT services market, Dell announced Wednesday that it has agreed to buy medical archive services company InSite One Inc.

Dell did not disclose the finances behind the deal.

InSite One is a private company based in Wallingford, Conn., with about 40 employees. The company offers cloud-based healthcare applications that archive medical records and share images.

Last year, Dell paid $3.9 billion to acquire IT services giant Perot Systems, which focuses on the government and healthcare sectors.

InSite’s cloud-based archive software and storage services will be complementary to Dell’s Unified Clinical Archive service. Combined, the products will offer hospital and private-practice customers the ability to access and share images regardless of the medical applications they have employed, Dell said in a statement.

The biggest difference between Dell’s existing Unified Clinical Archiving product and InSite One’s service is the cloud. Dell’s product is an on-premises, vendor-neutral archiving application. With InSite One, Dell is adding a cloud-based, vendor-neutral archiving service to its portfolio to give customers a choice of either on-premises archiving or cloud-based, hosted archiving — or a combination of the two.

“Our customers have been asking for a cloud-based archiving model,” a Dell spokeswoman wrote in an e-mail response to Computerworld. “InSite One has the only cloud-based archiving solution in the industry today. They also provide the services that make the transition to the cloud easier for customers.”

InSite’s storage-as-a-service product archives digital content as objects, meaning it stores information and the metadata describing it together so that it can be indexed and retrieved regardless of where it is stored in a virtualized, grid-based infrastructure.

InSite’s customers use the service on a subscription or pay-as-you-go basis. Dell said its strategy is to provide its customers with “open and scalable solutions with deployment options that dramatically reduce the complexity and cost of storage and data management.”

“Our customers have told us that managing the growing demands of both digital images and patient records is one of their greatest concerns,” James Coffin, vice president of Dell Healthcare and Life Sciences, said in a statement. “We are dramatically simplifying archiving and retention of clinical data, both medical images and electronic medical records. This … actually simplifies access to the information when it’s needed by clinicians.”

Dell said InSite’s data migration and recovery/backup services will also simplify the transition to the cloud for customers and ensure that information is managed safely and securely.

InSite said it manages nearly 55 million clinical documents and more than 3.6 billion medical images and supports almost 800 clinical sites. InSite’s cloud archival service supports all brands of picture archiving and communications system (PACS) and data sources. InSite’s service also gives clinicians Web-based access to radiological images and provides rapid indexing and sharing of data across disparate systems, according to the company’s Web site.

Universal language for health IT standards urged

Universal language for Health IT Standards urged.. well its about time!

Source: CMIO.net

Achieving the full potential of health IT will require an information-sharing infrastructure that facilitates data exchange among institutions, according to a report released by the President’s Council of Advisers on Science and Technology (PCAST). The council is a presidentially appointed group consisting of academia, non-governmental organizations and industry members.

That infrastucture would allow health data to follow patients wherever they are, with appropriate privacy protection and patient control, while giving doctors a more complete picture of patients’ medical conditions and needs, according to the report.

The PCAST report calls on the federal government to facilitate the widespread adoption of a “universal exchange language” that allows for the transfer of relevant pieces of health data while maximizing privacy.

PCAST recommended that the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC) and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) develop guidelines to spur adoption of an exchange language for use by health IT systems. “That would facilitate a transition from traditional EHRs to a more medically useful and secure system in which individual bits of healthcare data are tagged with privacy and security specifications,” PCAST stated.

The best way to manage and store data for advanced data-analytical techniques is to break them down into the smallest individual pieces that make sense to exchange or aggregate, according to the report. The pieces, “tagged data elements,” are accompanied by “metadata tags” that describe the attributes, provenance, and security and privacy protections of the data, according to PCAST.

A key advantage of the tagged data element approach is that it allows a more sophisticated privacy model—one in which privacy rules, policies and applicable patient preferences are bound to each separate tagged data element and are enforced both by technology and by law, according to the organization. “Also addressing a widespread privacy concern, such a system would not require the creation or assignment of universal patient identifiers, nor would it require the creation of any centralized federal database of patients’ health information,” the report added.

The report called on ONC and CMS to move rapidly to implement its recommendations by creating appropriate definitions in the meaningful use standards for health IT, which under law must be achieved in stages by 2013 and 2015.

Updates: EBook – Vendor Neutral Archive & How it will change the world (of Medical Imaging Informatics)

Dear all,

The month of December in 2010 held more surprises than I thought and really pushed my schedule off balance, I am trying to warp up as much as I can but I’m afraid that I’d have to push the ‘due date’ for the EBook “Vendor Neutral Archive & How it will change the world (of Medical Imaging Informatics” till end January if not early February 2011.

So stay tune folks 🙂

 

 

Fuji focuses on IT

Updates from HealthImaging.com on Fuji Medical Systems keeping up with the changing landscape of Healthcare Informatics

 

In response to the increasingly ubiquitous role of medical information systems in healthcare, FujiFilm Medical Systems has created a Medical Informatics Solution–Global (MIS-G) division while also shaking up the highest level of its informatics executive team.

Fuji said the purpose of the newly initiated Medical Informatics Solutions division is to expand the company’s products and services offerings in informatics as well as to strengthen collaboration on informatics within the company.

Stamford, Conn.-based Fuji Medical Systems chose its own Masaaki Ohtsuka as the division’s president, while promoting Bob Cooke to senior vice president of Fuji’s U.S. team, expanding that role to include not only sales and marketing but also IT.

New Article: Excuse Me, Do You Own Your Medical Images? What Your Didn’t Know About Your Image Archive

Dear fellow readers,

I would like to share with you folks a new whitepaper – Excuse Me, Do You Own Your Medical Images? What Your Didn’t Know About Your Image Archive. This whitepaper discuss the purpose of DICOM Archives and why most of the solutions requires a folk-life data migration even though DICOM is supposed to ensure interoperability.

Although I titled it under my series of “Excuse Me…” articles, this whitepaper really is a continuation of the Vendor Neutral Archive series and it can technically be counted as the 3rd in the sequence.

The 1st whitepaper can be accessed here

The 2nd whitepaper can be accessed here

This whitepaper (the 3rd) can be accessed here

All whitepapers mentioned above serves  as an introduction/teaser to an upcoming Ebook  – “Vendor Neutral Archive & How it will change the World (of Medical Imaging Informatics)”, estimated launch date : Mid-January 2011.

Enjoy 🙂

 

Ramblings: My latest media interview

As mentioned in my previous blog entry, I just completed an interview and this one is by Healthcare Technology Magazine (IHT).

While IHT is a new comer in the world of Healthcare IT  media publication, they did their first interview with Steven Yeo of HIMSS Asia Pacific & Middle East. Steven is a good friend and one of great judgement so I reckon that this publication can’t go too wrong :).

I personally like the questions they post, do take some time to read it at here.

Ramblings: What a week it has been! Parkway College and Napier Healthcare

Actually, it has been crazy busy for me for more  than a week, its  2 weeks actually!

I attended the 2nd EHR Asia Conference on the 23-24th Nov 2010 where I caught up with quite a few friends from around the region.

Then I attended the Health Informatics Technical Committee on the 25th (that sets the Health IT standards for Singapore, pretty cool) followed by the HL7 Singapore Communication Sub-Committee where I am chairperson.

On the 26th, I gave a lecture on Hospital Information Systems for  Parkway College Singapore  to delegates from Vietnam as part of a 5day Healthcare Management Program.

On the 28th Nov, I flew to Mumbai, India and stay here for business before flying to New Delhi, India on the 3rd Dec and deliver a lecture on Medical Imaging Informatics (including Vendor Neutral Archive)  on the 4th Dec before flying back to Singapore on the 5th Dec 2010.

All these while maintaining the commitment of my day job (someone has to pay the bills) and boy am I deadbeat! (I also completed an interview and warp up another whitepaper which I will upload tomorrow).

There is so much to share with you readers but in short, I’m glad I did all of the above (although my family time got seriously affected so I am trying to make it up now) because there is so much to be done in the Asia region! The hunger for knowledge is clearly evident yet the information is not made readily available.

I am hoping to develop more materials and expediting the second book I am working on (on Vendor Neutral Archive). I have also received some speaking invitations which I will try to accommodated into my schedule.

Stay tune for more folks, in the meantime, these are the slides I presented for the Napier India Medical Imaging Informatics Symposium 2010.

Graduate Students Create Recyclable Laptop

Creativity in Green, now that is a topic that constantly excites me.

I chanced up a blog entry titled “Graduate Students Create Recyclable Laptop” at Chronicle.com and the idea further extending the lifespan of the average laptop has been demonstrated  by graduate students from Stanford and Aalto University.

I think while the demonstration from their prototype is interesting (and I think it is a great idea they have), the goal the industry should try to achieve is establishing a common set of standards.

Lets look at the desktop industry, consumers have long enjoyed the ability to self-assemble a customized workstation of their choice / preference and the ability to replace or upgrade specific components if so desired.

Of course, this will be a long journey ahead (as will the concept be in healthcare informatics and technology) but I think best of breed is the way to go. The pie is big enough for everyone so why no strive to be the best in what we do as opposed to attempting world domination? (remember, the aim should always be patient safety and better care at lower cost).

A new laptop designed by students may not self-destruct in 30 seconds, but it can be disassembled in about that amount of time, which makes it easier to safely dispose of when it’s time to throw it out.

A group of seven graduate students, from Stanford University and Finland’s Aalto University, created a prototype of a recyclable laptop as a project for a corporate-sponsored mechanical-engineering class.

The invention, called the Bloom laptop, is made mostly of materials that can be recycled alongside ordinary household items, like metal, plastic, and glass. Materials like LCD screens and circuit boards, which need to be sent to specialized recycling facilities, can be easily separated in a few steps.

“I think where the group really nailed it on the head is where they tried to understand how to modify consumer behavior in a way that would promote green thinking,” said John Feland, who leads the Stanford class involved in the project. “If the design of the computer involves the consumer in the process of changing the environment, it becomes easier for people to do the right thing.”

The group was one of 10 teams in the Stanford engineering design class that received a challenge from a corporate sponsor, Autodesk. The company wanted a completely recyclable consumer-electronics product. However, the choice of the product was completely up to the students.

Aaron Engel-Hall, a Stanford mechanical-engineering graduate student and one of the group members, said making that decision took nearly nine months for the group. Through testing, the group discovered that it took them an average of 45 minutes and 120 steps to dismantle an ordinary laptop.

The students were also intrigued by the relatively short life of a laptop, averaging around two years, since that short life span increased the pace that waste entered the environment. These discoveries, Mr. Engel-Hall said, inspired the group to focus their attention on simplifying the laptop deconstruction process by designing pieces that could slide or snap apart, resulting in an end-product that Mr. Feland calls “where origami meets electronic engineering.”

In addition to encouraging recycling of old laptops, Mr. Feland said the Bloom design could also be both a more economical and greener laptop in other ways. The design makes it easier for consumers to replace the parts themselves, rather than scrap it if something goes wrong, he said.

Mr. Feland acknowledged that there are some minor technical hurdles in the design that need to be overcome before it can be produced for a wider market—such as the prototype’s size and weight.

The design has yet to be embraced by any laptop manufacturers, but all of the ideas are openly available through Autodesk’s Web site. Mr. Feland said corporate-sponsored classes have been a part of Stanford for 45 years, because they allow students to work on solutions for real problems companies are facing with the opportunity to experiment and fail—a luxury he said the real world doesn’t provide.